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Evgeni Malkin's fiery nature led to a $5,000 fine for slashing an opponent, the maximum allowed without a hearing. This financial penalty allows the veteran forward to remain available for the Pittsburgh Penguins during a challenging stretch of games. His presence is crucial as the team navigates a tough schedule, emphasizing the need for his focused contribution.
Evgeni Malkin has built an entire career off playing on the emotional edge; the swagger, the fire, the refusal to go quietly. Penguins fans love that about him, and critics have spent nearly two decades calling it both his superpower and his downfall.
But against the Winnipeg Jets, that combustible side resurfaced again. Malkin let frustration spill past the line and delivered a slash to Logan Stanley, drawing immediate attention from the NHL Department of Player Safety. And this time, the league didn’t let it slide with a warning. The league hit him with a fine and not just any fine, but the maximum allowed under the CBA. The number? Exactly $5,000.
The NHL’s rapid response shows the league isn’t letting emotions rewrite boundaries
The NHL formally posted the punishment publicly: “Pittsburgh’s Evgeni Malkin has been fined $5,000, the maximum allowable under the CBA, for slashing Winnipeg’s Logan Stanley,” @NHLPlayerSafety announced on X.
There’s an important nuance here, because the amount sits at the maximum line, it does not trigger a hearing. And that essentially gives Pittsburgh a very real competitive break. He gets punished financially, but he stays available, which means no supplemental discipline.For a 39-year-old veteran who still drives tempo and scoring spikes late in games, that’s massive.
Pittsburgh now shifts to proving staying power as the schedule gets unforgiving
The Pens started the 2025–26 season hot, but this stretch of facing nothing but playoff-grade opponents has exposed some cracks. Toronto is next. Then Washington. Then New Jersey. And then Los Angeles, before the cross-Atlantic flight to Sweden for the NHL Global Series.That’s why Malkin’s availability matters more than the $5,000 line item. Pittsburgh doesn’t just need him on the roster, they need him locked in. The slash may have been emotional. But what comes next must be calculated.
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